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There is a theory that there are 3 writers:1. The Real Isaiah. This author relentlessly curses Jerusalem and its leaders, and particularly the priests, for leading their people astray. He curses them all, priest and follower, for their lies, arrogance, foolishness, bloodlust, powerlust, hypocrisy, and for being basically rotten. He offers no hope at all, except the hope that everything he sees will be completely destroyed. He is utterly disgusted, and his curses come with a flashing light that screams, "And what's coming will serve you all right!" He writes with the passion of a man who has been angry about this for a long time, but who has not been heeded, and who truly wants to see it all fall. And he says it WILL fall. It's logical that this is the man who the priests and leaders of Jerusalem would want to get rid of. He makes them all look very bad.(Chapter - Verse)1: 1-17, 21-25, 29-312: 6-223: 1-264: 1, 45: 1-306: 1-137: 13, 17-20, 23-258: 5-8, 11-189: 8-2110: 1-11, 22-2317: 4, 10-1224: 1-13, 16-2225: 1227: 10-1128: 7-2229: 1-6, 9-16, 20-2130: 1-17, 25, 27-28, 30, 32-3331: 1-232: 5-1433: 1, 4, 7-16, 18, 232) The first author whose work is woven all through Isaiah's writing I will call The Levite. Who would be more threatened by the curses of The Real Isaiah? Those curses signal the end of Israel, the end of the Chosen People promises, the end of what was hoped would be a permanent, world-dominating Israelite religion - in short, the end of the Levite dream of being permanently at the top. And The Real Isaiah blames Jerusalem's leaders - its priests and king - for the whole mess. The Levite reverses many of Isaiah's predictions, and assures the reader that Yahweh's promises (to the Levite priests, to King David's family, to the Israelite people) are still intact and dependable. Then he builds hopeful and even gloriously beautiful dreams of the future for Israel, under Yahweh and his religion (quietly reclaiming the Levite place of power). He hates other religions; they are threats and to be despised - and all his visions glorify Yahweh's supremacy (which guarantees Levite supremacy).(Chapter - Verse)1: 18-20, 26-282: 1-54: 2-3, 5-67: 1-10, 12, 14-16, 218: 1-4, 9-10, 19-2210: 12-21, 24-3411: 1-1612: 1-614: 1-216: 517: 5-9, 13-1424: 14-15, 2325: 1-1126: 1-2127: 1-9, 12-1328: 5-6, 23-2929: 7-8, 17-19, 22-2430: 18-24, 26, 29, 3131: 3-932: 1-4, 15-2033: 2-3, 5-6, 17, 19-22, 2435: 1-103) The second author whose work is woven into Isaiah's I will call The Curser. He makes it his business to curse all of Israel's chosen enemies. His writing is distinct and separate from the other two. Like The Levite, he is undoubtedly a priest, but unlike The Levite, his writing does not interfere directly with the statements made by The Real Isaiah. Rather his curses are used to bolster The Levite's spin, and to express the violent, vengeful fury Yahweh feels for all the people who the Israelites hate. For instance, Isaiah curses Jerusalem, and then The Levite deflects the curse and shows how the Israelites can overcome it, and then The Curser comes in and re-fires the curse at (for instance) the Moabites. To the reader it almost seems like Yahweh himself has redirected his own curse. It is literary sleight of hand, and very inventive.As in so much of today's cut and paste art, like creative sound and film editing, or like a cleverly crafted piece of propaganda, these three characters flash in and out of view, their words chopped into each other's, one taking up where the other left off, until all their scripts run out. The end effect is that the listener does not hear each of the three separate scripts, but instead absorbs the idea that the editor wanted him to hear. We'll separate the three scripts.Chapter - Verse)13: 1-2214: 3-3215: 1-916: 1-4, 6-1417: 1-318: 1-719: 1-2520: 1-623: 1-1828: 1-434: 1-17
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